Exterminator 2, because I realized I had wasted almost an hour and a half of my life watching it. I actually prayed for forgiveness for wasting any of the precious time God gave me to watch that movie. Seriously.

Exterminator 2, because I realized I had wasted almost an hour and a half of my life watching it. I actually prayed for forgiveness for wasting any of the precious time God gave me to watch that movie. Seriously.

The ending of an old Shaw Brothers martial arts film called Avengng Eagle, when Ti Lung finds out that Fu Sheng was helping his fight his enemies for his own reasons, and not out of the goodness of his heart. A good lesson on accepting help from strangers.

Not a full movie, but the ending of the Little Rascals short "Birthday Blues" when Dickie Moore hands his mother the birthday present he wound up ruining the house for. A great short filled with true pathos.

And yes, the ending of "It's A Wonderful Life" when the little girl gives the speech about the angel getting his wings every time a bell rings. More as I think of them..

I don't think I've mentioned the final scenes in Michael Mann's Heat with the one character holding the other's hand as he dies and Moby's God Moving Over The Face of The Waters playing on the soundtrack. Wow.

I always forget to include the ending of Harold Ramis' Analyse That in this thread. It makes me cry for several reasons.

1. When I saw it, I was horribly homesick having left South Africa for the first time since I arrived here in 1987. I was on the plane flying home from Frankfurt when I saw it and was desperate to get home.2. The horrors of 9/11 were still vivid in my mind: I saw this in March 2002.3. The final scene that starts with Billy Crystal waving goodbye to Robert DeNiro and Joe Viterelli and then pans across the scarred skyline of New York : I started blubbing in the plane and the guy in the seat next to me moved away.

I cried in the middle and at the end of The Dark Knight Rises (2012), where Bruce Wayne finally makes the leap from prison, and during the end sequence where the will is read, Bruce's fate is discovered, and Robin inherits the Batcave. I saw TDKR in a midnight screening on the day of release, after watching the first two back to back, and found the experience very emotional.

I also admit to crying in the middle of Michael Bay's Transformers (2007), where the Autobots burst through the atmosphere and assume their new forms. That sequence moved me greatly for some reason, even though it wasn't an overtly emotional scene. Even now it still gives me shivers of joy.

The end of On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969), where James Bond holds the body of his new bride and the screen fades to black.

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"Many others since have tried & failed at making a watchable parasite slug movie" - LilCerberus